HR 4336 Signed- a Victory for WWII Women Pilots!

Back in January this year, it was reported that John McHugh, then Army Secretary, reversed a previous ruling which allowed WASPs, women pilots from WWII, to be buried at Arlington National Cemetery. It didn’t sit well with the families of the women, so they started a campaign to get Congress to overrule that decision. It worked.

Some of the WASP pilots at Lockbourne AAB, Columbus , Ohio

Victory

HR 4336 was signed into law by the President on May 20, 2016, a victory for the families who sought to bury their loved ones at Arlington.

The women pilots trained combat pilots. They test-flew repaired military aircraft. They towed airborne targets so the men could shoot live-fire rounds at them. They were subject to living in a barracks and military discipline.

Their Commander, Gen. Henry H. “Hap” Arnold, created the unit with the intention of it becoming a full military unit…but he was denied. And there are only about 100 or so women left alive- all of whom are in their 90’s.

A disappointed family

2nd Lt Elaine Harmon, one of the WASPs, passed away in 2015. The WASPS had been declared “active duty military” by law since 1977. But when Harmon’s family submitted their request, it was denied, and the Army Secretary said no one had the right to let them be buried there in the first place. It stunned the family.

So they began a journey to get that decision reversed, and do so with legal grounds. It took until May 10, 2016 to get the job done, but thanks to legislators, historians, family members, other WASP members, families, and many more, it became “mission accomplished.”

HR 4336 was introduced into Congress by Rep Martha McSally, an Air Force veteran and female pilot, with 191 cosponsors. Its final version had 2 amendments, but none were made after May 10.

The US Army is charged with monitoring the problem of space at the National Cemetery and must come up with solutions to it so that the National Cemetery will be a viable option for active military “well into the future.”

Join the conversation!

We have no tolerance for comments containing violence, racism, vulgarity, profanity, all caps, or discourteous behavior. Thank you for partnering with us to maintain a courteous and useful public environment where we can engage in reasonable discourse.